Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

It’s hard to believe that another CCI5* season is done and dusted. What a year it’s been! We’re looking forward to diving back into our favorite storylines from each 5* event around the world this year, so keep an eye out on EN for those stories coming your way soon.

Events Closing Today

Full Moon Farm Fall H.T. (MD); The Event at TerraNova (FL); Ram Tap H.T. & Classic Three-Day (CA)

News & Reading

CLOSING SOON! Eventing Nation and Horse Nation are pleased to present our upcoming Holiday Gift Guide series! A series of gift idea lists aimed at everything from the Organizational Freak to the Tech Nerd in your family or barn group, this series will launch in mid-November to help all of the hapless gift givers out there with a gift you’ll ACTUALLY want. If your brand would like to place a product into a list or even obtain full ownership of an exclusive list just for you, visit this link to fill out our interest form. Placements in these lists start at $250, and insertions are being taken until November 11.

Talk about resilience! The Chronicle of the Horse brings us the incredible story of an OTTB eventer who didn’t let a broken pelvis—and an unexpected diagnosis—stand in the way of his comeback. With the odds stacked against him, this tough Thoroughbred and his dedicated rider faced each challenge with grit, showing just how powerful the bond between horse and rider can be. Read the full story of this inspiring journey from setback to success here.

British eventer Ben Hobday and his standout partner, Shadow Man, who was catch-ridden in Paris by Chris Burton, made a (literal) splash at the Pau last weekend. Read up on their reunion and this special horse here.

Elevation Zoe does it again! For the third year running, a familiar furry champion has taken the top spot in the annual Major League Eventing Corgi Races at the MARS Maryland 5 Star, delighting fans with another victory. See how the reigning champ stole the show — yet again — here.

The 2024 USEA Area IV Championships have crowned six new champions! From seasoned riders to rising stars, these champions put in stellar performances to earn their titles across multiple divisions. Head over to the USEA for an in-depth look at each champion’s journey, their standout moments, and what lies ahead as they celebrate their well-deserved victories.

Sponsor Corner: Kentucky Performance Products

Healthy pastures require year-round maintenance. Fall is an important time to evaluate your horse pastures. Depending on your situation, you may need to rest overgrazed pastures, control weeds, spread manure, test soil, reseed, or fertilize. Healthy spring pastures depend on the upkeep they receive during the fall.

More details and tips from Kentucky Performance Products here.

Video Break

Some extra fun for you today with a helmet cam from a recent team chase! Would you try it?

High Hopes Become Reality at 2024 Dutta Corp. USEA Young Event Horse West Coast Championships

Only-Else and Kaylawna Smith-Cook win the 2024 USEA YEH West Coast 5-Year-Old Championship. Photo credit: Tina Fitch Photography.

Both Kaylawna Smith-Cook with her 5-year-old Only-Else and Andrea Baxter with her 4-year-old MBF Dig Deep said that their first impression of their young horses less than a year ago was that they would become champions. Those high hopes became reality at the Dutta Corp. USEA Young Event Horse (YEH) West Coast Championships at Twin Rivers Ranch in Paso Robles, California, on October 25-26.

For Smith-Cook and the bay Dutch Warmblood mare (Idrigill x Kapry-Else) owned by Bonner Carpenter, that initial moment of championship aspirations came when she first saw “Elsa” at the farm of five-star Australian eventer Sammi Birch in England in December 2023.

“My first impression of her was that she picked up the trot and then she cantered, and I was like, ‘OK, I don’t need to see any more.’ I didn’t even need to see her jump,” Smith-Cook recalled. “She’s just a beautiful mare and she’s a worker, and I love that about her. The more you ask of her, the harder she tries. She’s got a little bit of sass in there, so she’s not just a ‘Yes, ma’am.’ I just appreciate all of her little quirky traits.”

Only-Else and Kaylawna Smith-Cook. Tina Fitch Photography.

The first year of their partnership culminated with earning the highest score out of both the YEH West Coast and East Coast championships. The 90.15 from YEH championship judges Sally Ike of the United States and Christian Schacht of Germany was punctuated by having the best score of 64.60 (out of 70) for their jump test, gallop, and general impression on the course designed by Adri Doyal on Saturday. That followed having the best conformation score of 8.45 (out of 10) and being tied for the best dressage score of 17.10 (out of 20) on Friday.

“As soon as I went into the warmup, it’s like she was excited and knew there was something exciting and worth her while,” Smith-Cook said. “It was very nice to be rewarded and for the judges to really see her potential.”

They are now first in line to be awarded the prestigious Holekamp/Turner YEH Lion d’Angers Grant to represent the United States should they qualify for the FEI WBFSH Eventing World Breeding Championships in Le Lion D’Angers, France, in 2026 when the mare is 7 years old. In 2024, the Holekamp/Turner Grant went to That’s Me Z (Take A Chance On Me Z x Venetia) and Tommy Greengard, the 2022 winner of the 5-year-old West Coast championship.

“I’m so thrilled, and I’m so excited for the next few years to develop her and hopefully be able to take advantage of the grant,” Smith-Cook said. “What’s most important to me is that the horse in confident, and if she’s ready, it’s great that we’re in a great place to take her over there. I think she is a very brave horse, and she has all the pieces in a horse that I would think about that in the future.”

The top 5-year-old YEH championship score has now come out of the West Coast for two of the past three years. However, more than just the winner, the quality at the West Coast championships was evident across the board, as 10 of the 13 5-year-old entries had scores of 80.00 or higher, compared to 14 out of the 39 5-year-old entries in the East Coast championships.

The 5-year-old West Coast reserve champion was Fary Prince, a bay British Sport Horse gelding (The After Party x Farytale Cooley) bred and owned by Hulme Equestrian and ridden Helen Alliston, with a score of 87.85. That is the fourth-best out of both 5-year-old championships in 2024.

“The main thing with him is that he’s very competitive because of his vibe—so relaxed and just a cool customer,” said Alliston, who was competing in her first YEH West Coast Championships. “The cross country was awesome. It was a great course—challenging but fun and educational. It was fun to feel him gallop a little bit at the end because you don’t get to go that speed at Training level, which he does now.”

The Safe Harbor Award for the most rider-friendly mount went to the gray Zangersheide gelding Cupido Van de Hoge Dijken Z (Campino Gold x Cendrillon de L’herse) ridden by Allyson Hartenburg.

MBF Dig Deep and Andrea Baxter win the 2024 USEA YEH West Coast 4-Year-Old Championship. Photo credit: Tina Fitch Photography

Following her win in the 2023 5-year-old West Coast championship with Camelot PJ (Colman x Hauptstutbuch Evita), Baxter won the 2024 4-year-old West Coast championship with MBF Dig Deep (Golddigger x Amber). She acquired MBF Dig Deep from the Goresbridge Go For Gold auction in Ireland in November 2023, and he came to the United States in February 2024.

“I felt like he was a clear winner from the minute he landed here,” Baxter said. “I didn’t really know he was that nice when I bought him. I bought him as a resale project, but the minute he landed here, I was immediately impressed with him, and he instantly got taken off the roster of for sale.”

However, Baxter said that she didn’t fully start training and competing the bay Dutch Warmblood gelding until August after her five-star mare Indy 500 (Cromwell x Tensofthousands) passed away.

“After ‘Indy’ died, I needed a distraction,” she said. “So, I dragged the feral 4-year-old out of the field to sort of scare some new adrenaline out of me.”
Referred to in the barn as “Dig Deep”—with Baxter explaining that “he’s doesn’t really have a nickname because he’s kind of a serious guy”—he showed how serious he is about eventing.

“He takes on challenges with a positive, forward aggression and doesn’t have a backward bone in his body,” Baxter said.

Their final score of 86.30, third-best out of both 4-year-old championships, included the top jump test and potential score of 61.65 and dressage score of 16.90.
“He is beautiful,” Baxter said. “His conformation is beautiful. He’s a beautiful mover. He’s super, super careful in the show jumping and absolutely brave cross-country. As we all know, that’s what we’re looking for in an event horse, so I’m just really excited.”

MBF Dig Deep and Andrea Baxter. Tina Fitch Photography.

It’s been a banner year for Bryan Flynn’s MBF Sporthorses, who also sourced the winner of the USEF/USEA Developing Horse National Championship in the CCI2*YH-S division for 6-year-olds at Morven in Virginia in Starburst (Sligo Candy Boy x Monalease) ridden by Alexandra Knowles.

The 4-year-old West Coast reserve champion was Markonix, a bay Irish Sport Horse gelding (Echonix x High Offley Miss Arko) ridden by Michlynn Sterling and sourced from Gemma Phelan of Beechfield Stables Sport Horses in Ireland.

Three out of the five in the 4-year-old West Coast championship had scores better than 80.00 compared to six out of the 30 in the 4-year-old East Coast championship.
“The quality this year was amazing; it was crazy,” Sterling said. “They’re such better horses for this. I could just feel them growing—the atmosphere and getting in the big arena with the flags and banners and everything, to Adri built a serious test to show their scope and what they can do.”

Sterling rode the most entries in the YEH West Coast Championships with four. She has now competed in four of the five YEH West Coast Championships since they became a standalone event at Twin Rivers starting in 2020 but said this year was particularly meaningful because she has come back from a broken neck sustained in January.
“I ended up with a T1 compression fracture and a brachial plexus injury, so I couldn’t move my left arm,” she said. “To be able to come back, I had to take a deep breath and decided to focus on the young horses this year, as you can see from my record. My goal was to learn how to show them off better and just be better. Andrea Baxter has been a saint in helping me learn how to do that. One thing is having quality horses, but the other is being able to show them off. I really feel like this year I learned how to do that, and they all benefited.”

Sterling echoed the sentiments of those that left Twin Rivers excited about the future eventing prospects of their young horses. “I love this program, and it’s amazing,” she said. “It just teaches the horses and as a rider to go forward and be positive.”

YEH West Coast Championships at Twin Rivers (CA): [Website] [Scores]

Weekend Winners: Bouckaert, Waredaca, YEH Championships, & Hitching Post

We’ve kept a close eye on the action at Pau this weekend, but there’s been plenty of activity at home too! Between Bouckaert International, Waredaca Three Day, YEH Championships, and Hitching Post Farm, we had a handful of exciting events running.

We’re celebrating our Weekend Winners here, with an extra special shout out to the winner of our Unofficial Low Score Award, Avery Cascarino and Excel Star Quidam’s Cavalier, who won the Training Rider division at Waredaca on a 24.4. Congrats!

Bouckaert International & H.T. (GA) *US Equestrian Open Qualifier*: [Website][Scoring]

CCI 4*S: Sara Kozumplik and Rock Phantom (48.5)
CCI 3*S: Kimmy Cecere and Landmark’s Monaco (33.8)
CCI 2*S: Kelsey Seidel and Chico’s Man VDF Z (28.4)
CCI 1*S: Dominic Schramm and Cooley Dejavu (32.6)
Advanced: Emilie Mudd-Guy and Quite Nice 11 (47.8)
Open Intermediate: Lucia Strini and DHI Kevin G (36.6)
Open Preliminary: Sara Beth Anton and Go Go (29.5)
Preliminary Rider: Ella Hubert and Ardeo Dance Monkey (45.5)
Modified Rider: Marty Riney and Hunter O’Riley (35.8)
Open Modified: Lily Barlow and MBF Dignified Duchess (32.4)
Open Training: Karl Slezak and MBF Zenith Good Lux (31.7)
Training Rider: Elle Snyder and Oakland Quality (28.3)
Novice Rider: Katharina Huenermann and Q-Star (28.1)
Open Novice: Mary Bess Davis and O’Connor (31.9)
Beginner Novice Rider: Jack Brennan and Paladin (32.5)
Open Beginner Novice: Logan Harris and Fahrenheit’s Fortune (35.5)

Waredaca Classic Three-Day and H.T. (MD): [Website][Scoring]

Modified 3 Day: Megan Loughnane and Flamenco Ping (37.3)
Training 3 Day: Danielle Downing and Caribe PCH (30.5)
Novice 3 Day: Jamie Leuenberger and N’Chantress (30.0)
Beginner Novice 3 Day: Alissa Genovese and Island Fever (27.5)
Open Preliminary: Ema Klugman and FVF Top Gun (30.6)
Preliminary Rider: Kate Servais and LIFE STORY (32.7)
Modified Rider: Shelby Russell and Hillside HSH Larue (36.4)
Open Modified: Martin Douzant and Justified (31.2)
Open Training: Hannah Hawkins and FE Unico (26.4)
Training Rider: Avery Cascarino and Excel Star Quidam’s Cavalier (24.4)
Novice Rider: Katerina Pecinovsky and Affirminator (29.4)
Open Novice A: Karen Conk and Wild Rumpus (31.9)
Open Novice B: Stephanie Sills and ORS Deejay (26.9)
Beginner Novice Rider: Rachel O’Shea and Music City (28.4)
Open Beginner Novice: Holly Shine and Let The River Run (25.9)
Starter: Hanna bundy Hansen and Hay There Delilah (27.0)

YEH West Coast Championships at Twin Rivers (CA): [Website][Scoring]

Dutta Corp. USEA West Coast Young Event Horse 4-Year-Old Ch.: Andrea Baxter and MBF Dig Deep (86.3)
Dutta Corp. USEA West Coast Young Event Horse 5-Year-Old Ch.: Kaylawna Smith-Cook and Only-Else (90.2)
Young Event Horse 4-Year-Old LCQ: Rebecca Braitling and Petar D (86.8)
Young Event Horse 5-Year-Old LCQ: Helen Alliston and Fary Prince (91.8)

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (VT): [Website][Scoring]

Modified: Fiona Kling and Blu (35.8)
Training: Adeline Tullar and Rufian de Beaufour (31.2)
Novice 2: Jennifer M Treacy and Waterdale Cardento (29.4)
Novice 1: Bianca vazzoler and Reba (35.8)
Beginner Novice 1: Skyley Hudson and Yankee Gentleman (56.2)
Beginner Novice 2: Keith Robinson and Rs Pippin (31.5)
Starter: Emily Cooper and Swifts Shandy (63.7)

Monday News & Notes from Futuretrack

A new documentary following Colorado-based Dani Sussman as she journeyed to the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event this spring has just hit the airwaves. Produced by STF Video Productions, this 25-minute video captures the essence of eventing and the grit required to find any success in the sport. Don’t miss it in the embedded YouTube link above!

U.S. Weekend Results

Bouckaert International & H.T. (GA) *US Equestrian Open Qualifier*: [Website] [Scores]

Waredaca Classic Three-Day and H.T. (MD): [Website] [Scores]

YEH West Coast Championships at Twin Rivers (CA): [Website] [Scores]

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (VT): [Website] [Scores]

Major International Events

Les 5 Etoiles de Pau (France): [Website] [Scores] [Live Stream Replays] [EN’s Coverage]

News & Reading

Two new champions have been crowned at the 2024 Dutta Corp. USEA Young Event Horse West Coast Championships! In a thrilling showcase of future eventing stars, young horses put their skills to the test at Twin Rivers Ranch in Paso Robles, California. The champions demonstrated impressive talent, setting high expectations for their future careers in the sport. Check out the USEA’s full article for highlights, scores, and insight into the horses and riders who took top honors in this exciting competition.

Imagine a world where stallside CT scans are part of routine equine care. New research suggests that day could be closer than ever. The advancement of portable CT technology could revolutionize diagnostics, allowing vets to capture detailed images on-site without needing to transport the horse. This could mean quicker, more accurate diagnoses, less stress for the horse, and more targeted treatment plans. Check out the full article to learn more about this groundbreaking development in equine veterinary care.

Is mounting block avoidance turning into a regular struggle with your horse? Horse Sport has you covered with practical solutions to tackle this common behavioral issue. Their latest article delves into why some horses avoid the mounting block and offers effective strategies to create a calmer, more cooperative experience. Whether it’s a matter of trust, training, or habit, these tips can help you and your horse overcome mounting challenges. Read the full article for expert advice on setting the stage for a smoother start to every ride.

Meet Azure, the latest “sporthorse star” in Practical Horseman‘s feature series. This story highlights the remarkable journey of this talented partner of Phillip Dutton’s, known for her exceptional athleticism and drive. From her early days to becoming a top competitor, Azure’s story is one of dedication, skill, and a bit of flair that sets her apart. Dive into the full article to learn more about what makes Azure a standout and how Phillip manages her program to set her up for success.

Video Break

Watch Boyd Martin and Fedarman B’s final jump school with Peter Wylde, who’s mic’d up for the session, ahead of their fifth place finish at Pau:

“I’ve Dreamt of This, But I Never Believed It Could Happen”: Caroline Harris Wins Pau CCI5*

Caroline Harris and D.Day. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I’ve worked my whole life to even get to 5*, and it’s taken me until this year to finally get a horse to get here,” says 34-year-old Caroline Harris, her eyes brimming with tears as she stands still in the eye of the storm, moments after jumping the clear round that secured her the Les 5 Etoiles de Pau victory with D.Day. 

34 is, of course, practically still a baby by any metric – but in a sport that sees so many professional careers start in one’s teens, and where riders in their early twenties might be just as likely to win major titles as riders in their fifties and sixties, getting towards the middle of your thirties can start to feel like an awful lot of early mornings, rainy days, and trips to the muck heap. In the past few years, I’ve spoken to riders from all kinds of backgrounds, and all sorts of ages, ticking major boxes – riders who’ve made the step up to the top level in their forties after half resigning themselves to the fact that it just might not be on the cards for them; riders who’ve been called upon to represent their countries on Nations Cup teams for the first time in their seventh decade of life. Whatever, and whenever, your ‘first’ is, you’ll always remember it – and for Caroline, her first season at five-star has been the sort of yarn that pony novels have long been based upon. 

Caroline Harris and D.Day. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

You take one part young girl from a non-horsey family, one part sibling rivalry, one part inherent drive and one heaping helping of little-horse-that-could energy, and you get some kind of magic. 

“My family’s not horsey at all. My dad sent my sister off for riding lessons, and we grew up in London, so I just went along. I wasn’t really that into it – and then probably when I was 10, we moved to the country and I got a pony.  I’m quite stubborn, and because my sister wanted to do it, I was adamant I wanted to do it – so it just went from there, really,” laughs Caroline. 

When that bug bit her, though, it really bit her. By her late teens, she made her international eventing debut, and in her twenties, she opted to base herself with Australian five-star winner Sam Griffiths to learn the ropes as a young professional – a relocation that lasted for a decade. 

Caroline Harris and D.Day. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

These days, she’s based at Captain Mark Phillips’ Aston Farm with Zara Tindall and New Zealand’s Clarke Johnstone, and all three riders take an active part in one another’s day-to-day life. That mean’s that every day’s a school day – there’s something to be learned from every horse she sits on, but also plenty to be learned from watching, and chatting, and exchanging ideas and methods. And when she’s not there? She improves her feel at speed by pre-training racehorses part time. 

All of that adds up to shape a rider who can best be described as having kept her head down and plugged on with it all. Caroline’s well known for being an excellent producer of young horses, and several of her former rides have been bought up for bigger-name riders. And when that’s happened? She’s kept on keeping on, learning, producing, and waiting for the right horse to come along – and stay with her – so she could see her own dream through. 

It wouldn’t, admittedly, have occurred to her or breeder Fiona Olivier that now-ten-year-old D.Day might be that horse when he first arrived on her yard.

“Fiona bred him to just be a happy hack hunter for her son’s girlfriend, and they split up, so he ended up coming to me, and I thought ‘he’s a very cute Junior/Young Rider horse’, and he’s just gone on and on and on,” says Caroline, who now counts Lucy Matthews, Marie Anne Richardson, and Heather Royle among the gelding’s owners, along with Fiona. “He keeps just under the radar, just plugging away and just pulling out results, and I owe him everything for that.”

D.Day (Billy Mexico x Dillus, by Dilium XX) stepped up to four-star in mid-2022, finishing just outside the top twenty in a big class at Burgham’s CCI4*-S. Then, he went on to finish 16th in the prestigious CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-olds at Blenheim that year, before embarking upon a 2023 season that included a Nations Cup debut at Boekelo CCIO4*-L in October, a podium finish in an extraordinarily tough Chatsworth CCI4*-S in May, and a fourth place finish in his return to the eight- and nine-year-old class at Blenheim. And this season? A twelfth place finish in his, and Caroline’s, five-star debut at Luhmühlen in June, which came after the same placing in the tough, slick, and wet CCI4*-S at Bicton in May, and a win – again in the relentless wet – at Lignières CCI4*-S last month. 

Caroline Harris and D.Day. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I’m just so lucky that he is who he is,” says Caroline fondly. “He’s not the most talented in any shape or form, but he gives me everything all the time, and I owe him everything. I just can’t really believe it – I never came here thinking I’d even think about winning. I almost didn’t run yesterday, so I was really not looking forward to the ground, but it goes to show, a good cross country horse in the mud can pull you up sometimes!”

That ‘pulling up’ isn’t insignificant: the pair began their week in 22nd place on a score of 30.3, and climbed to the lead yesterday after delivering the swiftest round of the day for just 10 time penalties. In this era of the sport we’ve become so accustomed to a hefty first-phase influence, and it’s often hard to imagine anyone outside the top ten, or even the top five, making their way to the win – but this week’s result shows that there’s still room for a good, old-fashioned climb. It was with that half in her mind that Caroline made the decision to run yesterday. 

“My friends definitely gave me a bit of a kick up the backside,” she laughs. “He ran so well at Lignières in the mud, and he ran very well at Chatsworth in the mud last year, and they just reminded me of that.  I think because everyone else was running, I was like, ‘come on, stop being a wimp and go!’”

Caroline Harris and D.Day. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But even so, actually climbing to the top spot was never on the agenda. Instead, the goal was just to consolidate everything they’d learned in their impressive debut a few months ago. 

“He went round Luhmühlen double clear, but we took a couple of long routes because he went a bit green and he was a bit careful and went high. So I just wanted to have a more confident run cross country here, which I think is why I was wondering whether I should run – because it was so wet and I didn’t want him to go high and scared,” she explains. “But he was just a legend. He was so straight, and he’s so quick – he’s 80% blood – and he flew through the mud. He didn’t care at all. I had no expectations [coming into the week], I just wanted another 5* under my belt.”

It doesn’t get much more ‘under the belt’ than winning – and as Caroline rode back into the chute after her round, she disappeared into a sea of fellow competitors, who battled amongst themselves to be first in line to scoop her up in a hug. She may not – until now – have been a name known amongst casual fans of the sport, but one thing is very clear: Caroline Harris is a rider who all the other riders, including the ones you all know very well, have been expecting this result from for a long time. 

“I’ve dreamt about this, but I never thought it would ever happen in my entire life; you’re up against the amazing Tom and Ros, and I’m not even anywhere near them, and to come home having beaten them is quite unbelievable,” she says smiling through teary eyes. 

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Pau’s showjumping track is notoriously tough: it’s big, it’s square, it’s full of distances and turns that feel more like a pure showjumping course, and the influence it exerts on the final leaderboard always reflects that. But on paper, today seemed like a slightly less influential day – though the course still walked, and looked, as big and tough as ever. 21 of the 55 starters jumped clear rounds; just one of those added time penalties while doing so. Was the course simply built in a more forgiving manner this year, or did the shortened cross-country track, and the great condition of the horses today, contribute to fresher, tidier efforts in the ring? It’s anyone’s guess, and likely, the answer sits somewhere in between the two – but what this less influential final day meant was that we finished with many of the same tight margins we started with. 

The tightest of them all? The 0.3 penalties separating Caroline and D.Day from last year’s winners, Ros Canter and Izilot DHI.

“I think we always feel when we walk the course here, that it’s very big. It’s probably one of the biggest courses we ever have to tackle. But I think also that the horses really enjoy jumping off the surface, and I think as much of the ground conditions weren’t easy yesterday, the horses have all come out of it, feeling very well this morning,” she says. “So they were able to tackle such an up to height and technical track all quite well.”

Izilot jumped a grown-up, neat clear to take second place, but before doing so, Ros headed back out on course to revisit what they’d encountered yesterday.

“I actually took some of the kids out for a bit of a bike ride this morning, and we stopped and had a look at the ground where you came back from the race course to the log on the mound [at 21],  and they all sunk and got stuck. So that’s what the ground was like, and it’s amazing the job that everybody did to keep it going. So we’re all very grateful for that. This is a very happy event for me – I absolutely love coming here. My horses always seem to enjoy it, and it’s a great event for my family, too.”

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Izilot’s performances through the week have looked as confident and steady as we’ve seen him – an effort that’s been ongoing for much longer than just this year, but in the 2024 season alone, has seen his rider try plenty of creative ways to work through his inherent spookiness. Earlier this year, it was all about hacking out at home and travelling away from home if she wanted to school him, so he could get used to working sensibly in new environments; as the year went on, she went back to adding in work at home, and jumped on the chance to give him some incidental ‘exposure therapy’ when she could. Most recently, that happened at Burghley, where the gelding led the dressage and began cross-country well, but then had an early run-out. On Sunday, he was spared from competitive duties, but got to spend plenty of time absorbing the hubbub of the main arena anyway: he was William Fox-Pitt’s ride for his retirement ceremony, and then happily carried Harry Meade around the prizegiving. All of it gave him valuable experience, and looked very intentional – but actually, Ros admits, it was just a happy bit of chance that she’s been able to benefit from since. 

“I think they really couldn’t find another horse they could use,” she laughs. “But I was very happy for him to do that. He can be sharp and spooky, but he’s actually quite a quiet-natured horse and quite a sensible horse. Most of my horses I would have said no, because a prizegiving does buzz them up. But I think  he’s got a very level head, so I was very happy for him to go and soak up the atmosphere at Burghley and have to canter past the flower pots and things that sometimes catch us out. So it wasn’t in the plan, but I was very happy for him to be borrowed for that.”

Now, it’s time for both the creative training and the happy competitive outings to hit pause for a little while, and give both horse and rider a bit of downtime.

“He will have a very well deserved holiday. He’s been up and running for a long time this year, so I’m very much looking forward to him getting home and having some time in the field,” Ros says. “Sometimes he makes me a little nervous riding him at home, so I’m quite looking forward to having a break from him too!”

Tom McEwen and Brookfield Quality. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom McEwen secured third place with fifteen-year-old Brookfield Quality in the horse’s second five-star start – a happy finish after a tricky Luhmühlen debut, wherein the horse performed excellently but was struck by the worst of the cross-country day storm, and subsequently suffered a bad nosebleed. This week, though, he’s been able to show off what he couldn’t on that occasion, and has proven himself as a much tougher, grittier five-star horse than many would have expected. His clear round this afternoon earned him third place, to the collective delight of Tom, the Brookfield team, and formed rider Piggy March. 

“Norris has been amazing,” says Tom. “He’s an awesome little horse with a huge amount of character. It’s taken a bit of time to get to know one another, but he is amazing. So on, the cards will be hopefully a well deserved break and then hopefully some more 5*s next year.”

Alex Hua Tian and Chicko. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

China’s Alex Hua Tian doesn’t often get to make five-star bids, as championships have to remain at the forefront of his country’s developing eventing system. But in Chicko, the former ride of Polly Stockton, he’s long suspected he may have a horse for the very top of the sport – a suspicion that proved true this week. The pair started their week on a 28.9 for 13th place, and climbed to fifth with one of the fastest rounds of the day yesterday. Today, the debutant horse came out as fresh as a daisy to deliver a clear round and step up one place into the spot previously occupied by Piggy March and Halo, who tipped just one rail en route to a top ten finish. Another spot was also opened up in the top ten by Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent, who dropped from eighth to 16th after a shock two rails. 

“He’s so nifty. The faster you go, the more he scurries, and the higher he goes in the air,” says Alex. “He got a little low towards the end, and had a good rattle at the second last, but once he had that rattle, I knew I could trust him down to the last. I’m so happy for his owners, Kate and Pete Willis. He’s a horse that actually was produced for many years by Polly, so I’ve only had the ride on him the last couple of years.  He’s just so cool to ride – she’s done such a tremendous job.”

“I’m just delighted,” he continues. “I have a huge amount of faith in the horse, and I knew he had a good chance of being competitive here, just the type of horse he is, what his advantages and disadvantages, and I felt everything here at Pau was going to suit him, and also give us a bit of an indication of what we might do next year.”

Now, with this behind him, next year could see some very exciting entries indeed. 

“I think Badminton is a very different kind of test – yes, more difficult, but also very different,” muses Alex. “So whether or not he would be quite as competitive in that field or with that kind of test, I don’t know. But, he’s a horse that, even though he’s 14, every three months he just seems to improve again. You just think that you’ve hit that limit in terms of improvement, and he just surprises you every time.”

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd Martin soldiered through the last day of a tough week to take fifth place with the indomitable Fedarman B, who’s been the best possible partner for his battered and bruised rider after a tough stint in the office at Maryland last week. 

“It was a bit of a rough week for me,” admits Boyd, who thinned his obligations by one yesterday when opting to withdraw debutant Miss Lulu Herself from the tough conditions. “This time last week I was getting out of hospital, and it’s tricky mentally,  wondering if you should or shouldn’t come, and then you get the horses here and you get here, and it’s horrific conditions. But I kept telling myself I had a champion horse in Bruno, and to finish fifth in such a large field is something to be very proud of.”

Bruno, he continues, was able to step up and help his rider out en route to taking another top-ten placing at this level. 

“I definitely wasn’t 100%. I think Bruno covered for me a bit this weekend, but he’s still got plenty left in the tank, and I feel like we’ve got a handle on his dressage now,” says Boyd, who started his week in 16th place on a 29.5. “I think there’s a lot to be excited for Bruno’s future, and I’m very, very grateful that the Annie Goodman syndicate got behind me and allowed me to do a second trip to France this year. The sky’s the limit with him.”

Bruno has become one of the most competitive horses in Boyd’s string: he’s previously finished in eighth place here and at Luhmühlen, and was tenth at the Olympics this summer – but Boyd, who rides the gelding in honour of the late Annie Goodwin, admits that he’s not necessarily a horse he’d have talent-spotted as a youngster.

“I’d never buy him as a young horse. He doesn’t have enough blood – but he has just got so much heart. He’s gutsy. He never says no, and even when the chips are down, he grits his teeth and jumps clear or fights his way through the flags at the end of the course when he’s knackered, and he lifts a gear in the dressage, and it’s a real privilege to be able to ride a horse of that calibre,” he says with a grin.

Lea Siegl and DSP Fighting Line. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Austria’s Lea Siegl and DSP Fighting Line also battled through a tough week en route to an excellent finish, but for slightly different reasons. This time last year, they suffered a hugely uncharacteristic crashing fall on cross-country, leaving Lea to recover from a facial injury, and when the season was set to begin again this spring, she was once again sidelined with a badly broken leg. She had to spend eight weeks keeping her leg elevated to help it recover from a complex operation and the addition of a metal plate, and that left her almost no time to secure her qualification for Paris. But she did, clinching a win in the CCI4*-L at Baborowko after just a few rides back, and she and Fighty headed to Versailles – only to be spun at the first horse inspection. And so the goals for the latter half of the season shifted, and the focus moved back to Pau – an event that Lea wanted to rewrite for herself. 

She and Fighty have, bit by bit, done just that this week, starting with a 29.5 on the flat for 16th place, and climbing after a gritty ride through the slop yesterday to seventh place. Their clear today pushed them one spot up the leaderboard, and allows them to close the book on 2024 with a smile on their faces and higher hopes for next year. 

“He was amazing. I think the whole week, he’s felt really good,” says 26-year-old Lea. “I know he’s a good jumper, but after this shit ground yesterday, it was not so easy for the horses. I was still hoping that he was quite fit today, and this morning at the trot up, he was already a bit too motivated! So he was feeling really well today, and he did a nice job. I’m  also happy because last year was shit here and now to come back and have this result feels good.”

The relief of it all, she says, has her dreaming again.

“I was already thinking about it: if it’s good in Pau, if everything goes well, my childhood dream was always to compete at Badminton. He’s turning 18 next year, but he’s still feeling quite fit,  he’s not feeling like he’s 18,” she says. “He’s getting better and better as he’s getting older. So we will see. He gets a winter break now, and if next year he feels as this year and he is fit and motivated, I might give him another season and maybe go to Badminton, because I think he’s the horse you can ride at a 5* like Badminton. I think not every horse is born to be a Badminton or Burghley horse or a 5* horse, in general, but I think he is so, if he feels good, we have a plan.”

Piggy March and Halo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What a difference two days make: after her dressage test on Friday, Piggy March wasn’t at all sure that she’d run her five-star debutant, the little stallion Halo, on cross-country, and after talking to her about it, I was nearly sure she wouldn’t. But her mid-field draw proved fortuitous: she was able to watch enough horses happily return home that she figured she might as well give it a shot. The pair ended up delivering one of the day’s speedier rounds, thrusting them from tenth to fourth place, and though they had a rail today, Piggy couldn’t be more pleased with Jayne McGivern’s tiny horse’s seventh place finish. 

“He’s amazing – I’m so proud of the little chap,” she beams. “I’m just glad I wasn’t first out yesterday, because I probably wouldn’t have run. It was nice to see [pathfinder] Oliver [Townend] do such a great first round, his horse just looked so happy, and like he went through the mud. It’s unknown ground here when it’s wet, because you’re normally on top of it. I was definitely conscious of where the horse is at and his stage in his career, and what’s the right thing for him. I was probably being a big fanny! But he was as good as I know that he is. He pricked his ears and he actually loved it, and he gave me some feel. He’s a gorgeous little horse – I’m so excited. He wasn’t scared at all. He didn’t give a monkeys’!”

Now that Piggy’s running a smaller string than before – by choice – she’s more protective than ever of the horses she runs. But now, she feels like she might be ready to take Baby out of the corner. 

“He’s a stallion but he’s so brave – he’s super brave. But I protect him. He’s a lovely horse, and he’s a little unicorn, so I sort of think, ‘oh, I just want to make sure he’s okay’ – and today, he felt fantastic,” she says. “I obviously will go around in circles [about that pole], but I don’t think there was anything that I could do if I jumped it another million times! It was by the gateway; I think  maybe he looked into the gate rather than totally at the fence. But such is life! He gave a super feel and jumped a lovely round.”

Like Lea, Piggy has been hoping for a happy ending to a tough year, and a bit of better luck to herald in a positive start to next season – and in this result, she’s got it. 

“It’s been a hard work year. It’s been a big emotional roller coaster of a year, for lots of different reasons, obviously,” says Piggy. “But we know that – it’s riding the wave of life, or sport or horses, and sometimes, you just think everything you touch goes to shit. You keep trying to bounce up and you don’t want to be negative, and you keep trying to be like, ‘Let’s go again. Let’s go again. Let’s go again.’ You keep getting smacked back down. I’m not getting the violin out, but there’s just times it’s like, ‘this is really difficult’ – but we’re also very fortunate. So I shut up and get on with it! We’ve got another night here; we don’t go back to tomorrow night. So we’re going to go and drink French wine and enjoy it.”

After the very long drive home, Piggy’s focus will shift from competition to something equally major: a 1,100km cycle from Scotland to London next month, which she’s undertaking with husband Tom and a variety of fellow riders and friends in order to raise money for the British Eventing Support Trust and Spinal Research in memory of her sister-in-law, Caroline March, who opted to medically end her own life earlier this year after a long stint spent rebuilding her life following a spinal injury sustained in a cross-country accident.

“I get off the last event, and I think, ‘shit, I’ve really got to make sure I get fit this week because then I want to back off the next before going’ – it’s awful,” laughs Piggy, who’s been cycling fairly unfathomable distances most days in training. “But it’s good. It’s such a good cause, and I just really hope every rider or lover of the sport, I really, really hope anyone involved, just puts their fiver in the pot. We’re doing this for our community, and trying to keep it all positive, but we just know through this year that it can very quickly go wrong. If it does, there’s a point for everybody to just help. It’s not negativity, it’s trying to remain positive of our great sport, our great, great community that we do have, but it would just make such a difference. You never know when it’s you [who’ll need help]. I’ve spent my life worrying about having a pesky show jump down like today, thinking, ‘Bloody hell. I’ll kill myself for three days if it happens’. But really, that’s not a bad day in the grand scheme of things, and when you’ve suddenly had real bad days, weeks, months, years, and terrible outcomes, it puts it into perspective. It’s not a bad day. It’s very easy for things to be a bad day, and it really affects people’s life. That might not be you, but it might be your mate or your mate’s mate. Somewhere along the line of our little bubble that we’re in, it does affect people, and we all just need someone that you can pick up the phone any time to just be like, ‘help, this has gone wrong.’”

Will Coleman and Off The Record. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Swedish Olympians Frida Andersen and Box Leo put a pin in another exceptional week this season by jumping a classy clear round to secure eighth place – a three-phase climb from 32nd – and cement their place as ones to watch in the seasons to come, while ninth place went the way of Tim Price and his smart first-timer Jarillo, who also jumped a fresh, tidy clear round. The top ten was rounded out by the hugely consistent Yasmin Ingham and Rehy DJ, who added no faults and now have three five-star placings to their name. Will Coleman and Off The Record climbed another five places to finish in 24th after a one-rail round.

That’s all for us – for now – from Pau, and the final event of the season, on this side of the pond, anyway. We’ll be back with lots more eventing news and views tomorrow, and when I finally make my way back to England and sleep off seven months of accumulated Big Tired, I’ll also be back with lots of opinions and thoughts and retrospectives on this and the rest of the events I’ve been fortunate enough to cover this year. Until then, thank you for always coming along on this wild ride with me. Go Eventing (and, in my case, gratefully, Go To Bed). 

Les 5 Etoiles de Pau: [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]



Flash Update: Caroline Harris (GBR) Claims Les 5 Ètoiles de Pau Victory with D. Day

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Caroline Harris and D. Day (Billy Mexico – Dillus, by Dilum xx) have jumped a fault-free show jumping to secure their first CCI5* victory at Les 5 Ètoiles de Pau in France today, finishing on a score of 40.3 to best defending champions Ros Canter and Izilot DHI in second on a 40.6.

Great Britain continued to flex its dominance, securing all three podium positions with World #1 Tom McEwen and Brookfield Quality in third on a score of 43.0

China’s Alex Hua Tian and Chicko marked a banner weekend at the level with a fourth place finish on a score of 45.7

For the U.S., Boyd Martin topped the small contingent with Fedarman B in fifth place, adding yet another clear FEI jumping round to an impressive roster to finish on a score of 47.1. Will Coleman also delivered a strong round with one rail down aboard Off the Record, finishing 24th on a score of 63.6.

Tilly will be along later today with a full debrief on a thrilling finish to our final 5* of the season. Until then, you can use the links below to catch up on what you might have missed.

Les 5 Etoiles de Pau: [Website] [Scores] [Live Stream Replays] [EN’s Coverage]

One Horse Spun; Five Held at Pau Final Horse Inspection

Yeah, no, we don’t know either. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s no point in mincing our words: yesterday’s cross-country day at Les 5 Etoiles de Pau, the final CCI5* of 2024, was rough. It went on for hours and soggy hours; the whole course, which was ten fences shorter than expected and lost over two minutes of time as a result, felt like one big water jump. To pass from one fence to the next on foot, you’d simply have to accept that the sluice of sadness would make its way, en masse, from the floor and into your socks. A bit like that part in Titanic when the captain locks himself in his little captain-ing room and lets the Atlantic Ocean break through the windows, you know? Very that. Except that by about 4p.m., my heart definitely stopped wanting to go on.

But the mud we saw on site yesterday wasn’t the same as the mud we saw at, say, Badminton last year, or the European Championships in Haras du Pin. That was a deep, sticky, holding mud, that started out thick and gloopy and became more and more gluey as it dried in the sun – and that’s the kind of mud that’s seriously hard work for horses, because they have to expend extra energy pulling their hooves out of the muck with each stride.

Arthur Marx demonstrates how I looked when I took my boots off and saw the state of my socks last night. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Yesterday’s mud, though, had such a high water content that it was basically – sorry – toilet water, and thatkind of mud is significantly less taxing, because horses are able to find some purchase on a lower level of ground and move through the mud, which splashes out around their footsteps rather than sucking them down into the mire. It’s still trickier than riding on the top of good going, and there’s still some amount of drag to keep in mind, just as when riding through a water jump, but largely, it has a significantly less punishing effect on horses who are happy to get a bit dirty.

The results of this were writ large at this morning’s horse inspection, which was jam-packed with remarkably fresh horses standing on their back legs and behaving, generally, incredibly badly. I never envy the grooms and riders who have to try to maintain some semblance of control in those situations, but I do love to see horses with a fistful of joie de vivre on a Sunday morning, because it’s not always the case.

There are a few things that contributed, in tandem, to all this fizziness: the ‘easier’ kind of mud, the shortened course, the smart, sensible, empathetic and sympathetic horsemanship we saw across the board yesterday – I didn’t hear a single watch beep out a minute marker all day – and, happily, the odd Pau tradition of holding the horse inspection very nearly in the afternoon. Today, it began at 11.45 a.m., after a rousing morning of horseball in the main arena (yes, really), and because the clocks went back last night, that meant that the horses had a huge amount of time to rest and recover – in some cases, a solid 24 hours. Maybe they also really liked that Linkin Park was being loudly and inexplicably blared through the speakers, too, and just fancied starting a mosh pit.

Great Britain’s Storm Straker and Fever Pitch. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As at the first inspection, the ground jury did exercise an abundance of caution in monitoring the competing horses, which is a heartening move as we continue to centre horse welfare. Five, in total, were redirected to the holding box by James Rooney (IRL), Emmanuelle Olier (FRA), and Katarzyna Konarska (POL): these were Katie Magee’s Treworra, 18th after cross-country; Storm Straker’s Fever Pitch, 17th, Tom Rowland’s KND Steel Pulse, 56th, Dominic Furnell’s Bellscross Guy, 55th, and Joseph Murphy’s Belline Fighting Spirit, 32nd.

All but one would ultimately be accepted into the competition. That was Ireland’s Dominic Furnell and Bellscross Guy, who had completed yesterday’s cross-country with 20 jumping penalties and 52.8 time penalties.

Caroline Harris and D.Day — our overnight leaders, and also our pick of the best-dressed at the final trot-up. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That means our final field for this afternoon’s showjumping sits at 55 competitors, as nobody withdrew overnight. Our overnight leaders, Caroline Harris and D. Day, sit on a score of 40.3, while second-placed Ros Canter and Izilot DHI – our 2023 champions – are a breath behind them on 40.6. Tom McEwen and Brookfield Quality sit third on a 43, while fourth-placed Piggy March and Halo are a rail and change off the win on a 45. The margins continue to remain tight throughout the leaderboard, and that’s significant: the showjumping here is the most influential of any five-star, with big, square fences, true showjumper-y distances, tough turns, and an arena surface that can be quite dead underfoot and doesn’t have the same ‘spring’ to it that Luhmühlen’s does.

“Hey, lady, you wanna buy a TV?” Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Showjumping will begin at 3.00 p.m. local time (2.00 p.m. British time/10.00 a.m. EST), and can be streamed, as usual, via Pau TV. We’ll be back with the full story on how the final day has played out once it wraps. For now, if you need us, you can find us crying into a plastic cup of rosé in the scrap of sunshine we’ve provisionally been gifted. Allez! Allez. Allez.

Les 5 Etoiles de Pau: [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Sunday Links

Exciting news if you’re planning to attend the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto! Each year, this show features an Arena Eventing competition, and Boyd Martin has confirmed he’ll be competing this year for the first time since 2017. Boyd will join a roster of riders including Colleen Loach, Jessica Phoenix, Kendal Lehari, Selena O’Hanlon, Waylon Roberts, Holly Jacks, and multiple others. Tickets are on sale now here.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Bouckaert International & H.T. (GA) *US Equestrian Open Qualifier*: [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Waredaca Classic Three-Day and H.T. (MD): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

YEH West Coast Championships at Twin Rivers (CA): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times/Scoring]

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (VT): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times/Scoring]

Major International Events

Les 5 Etoiles de Pau (France): [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Links & Reading

It’s sale season! Stay tuned for our wishlist of horses available in this year’s Goresbridge Go for Gold sale, but in the meantime you can take a look at the catalog of drool-worthy future eventing stars here.

Selling A Horse? What To Consider And How To Mitigate Risks In Off-Farm Trials

Oliver Townend: What the Sport of Eventing Needs to Thrive

A Small But Mighty Field of Youngsters Kicks Off The Dutta Corp. USEA YEH West Coast Championships

Little Bo Peep, George Washington And A Zebra Gallop Into A Ring …

Lower Leg-Building Exercises for Riders

Will Coaxing a Nervous Horse Reinforce Her Nervous Behavior?

Video Break

Don’t try this at home, kids (or do, and send us the video):

When It Rains, It Paus: The Cross-Country Day Debrief

When we packed up and left the media centre last night at Les Etoiles de Pau, the final CCI5* of the 2024 season, we did so in a tiny window of opportunity: the day’s heavy rain had become a torrential downpour, and in that moment, it had all but ceased for a few minutes. But the damage had been done, and the decision had been made to remove three fences: an angled trakehner at 17, an oxer at 28, and the first element of 29ABCD, a three-part combination comprised of a brush-topped rolltop at the peak of a mound and two skinnies on a bending line at the bottom of it. 

It was no more or less than we expected, really – we knew there was deep ground on site already even before the rain, and we knew, too, that although Pau is generally a very flat course, its selection of man-made mounds would become oil slicks if too much rain fell. Those adjustments, and a couple of changes made to the routes between fences, to allow horses to avoid boggier ground, felt like a reassuring step. 

And then the rain kept coming and didn’t stop coming. This morning, when we reappeared a few hours ahead of the start of the cross-country, we were immediately greeted with a totally new-look cross-country course – one that had a total of ten fences, and eleven jumping efforts, removed from it. Added to last night’s removals were fences 4 through 6, 16, 17, and 19AB, and 31 – a change that meant that Pau’s typically relentless twists and turns, which can make it feel like two CCI4*-S courses smashed together, actually had quite a lot of open galloping stretches. 

Not, of course, that there would be much high-speed action. The previously deep going had turned into a bottomless soup; huge swathes of standing water rendered much of the venue impassable and the scant proportion of the ordinarily huge and enthusiastic crowd that braved the conditions had to slog their way through ankle-deep slop in pursuit of a bit of sport. It wasn’t to be a day for catching the time; it wasn’t even, really, to be a day for bothering with a watch at all. Instead, it was a day for riding every step with a conscientious awareness of the feeling beneath you and making decisions accordingly. 

Nice for them, I guess.

Before the sport started, I’ll admit I wasn’t thrilled. It was all rather Jurassic Park – the organisers had been so preoccupied on whether they could, that they didn’t stop to think if they should. Was it a step too far? Was it going to be a case of human arrogance and hubris, trying to put on an event even in these conditions? “If this was Germany or Britain, it’d have been canceled already,” sniffed one owner in disbelief as we discussed the carnage we felt sure was about to unfold. At best, I feared that this would make us look, as an industry collectively, like we don’t really care about our horses’ limits; at worst, I suspected a catastrophic injury could be on the cards. It was with a heavy enough heart that I headed out on course and into the muck, and not just because my boots had already sprung a leak (although, look, that did play a big part in it). 

Happily, though, it turns out I’m just a bit doom-and-gloom at the end of a season that’s made me think, at least once per month, that I’m existing through the longest day of my life thus far. This was absolutely one of those days. But it wasn’t the catastrophe it could have been: there were just two withdrawals midway through the day (Boyd Martin with his second ride, debutant Miss Lulu Herself, and seventh-placed Samantha Lissington and Lord Seekonig, for what it’s worth) rather than the ten or fifteen or twenty I’d expected before the start of the day’s competition. And while there absolutely were problems out on course, they really weren’t any more prevalent than in any five-star competition – of the 71 starters, 56 completed, making a 79% completion rate (higher than Burghley last month, which was a 66.2% completion rate), and 41% jumped clear for a clear round rate of 58% (Burghley, again, boasted a clear rate of 49% with a similar number of runners). What was very different, though, was how swift they could stand to be. Nobody would come close to the optimum time today; across the field of 56 finishers, the average time penalties were 29.3, or a minute and 13 seconds over the optimum time. 

The ground didn’t allow for quick riding, snappy getaways, or economical inside lines – the only lines to ride were whichever ones looked least sloppy – but the incredibly high moisture content actually ended up being something of a godsend. There was no part of the going that could have been reasonably described as holding, and instead, horses were able to travel through the soup, getting purchase on a lower, firmer level. Nor was it as slippery as it could have been, though those prospective slips were largely mitigated by careful riding. When they did happen, as in the case of New Zealand’s Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park, fifth after dressage, who lost purchase behind as they took off for a wide table early in the course, and were lucky not to fall, they were breath-stopping – but we weren’t at all plagued with falls on the flat or horrifying skids in the way I’d expected we might be, and the loss of nearly all the mounds from the course certainly looked a wise move indeed when considering this. 

Caroline Harris and D. Day. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Speed might not have been the name of the game, but an early-ish swift round – and ultimately, the fastest of the day with 10 time penalties for coming home 25 seconds over the time – actually changed the shape of the competition entirely. That was executed by Great Britain’s Caroline Harris and her ten-year-old British-bred D. Day (Billy Mexico x Dillus, by Dilum XX), who she rides for a tribe of owners in Lucy Matthews, breeder Fiona Olivier, Marie Anne Richardson, and Heather Royle. That round – which never looked rushed, and was arguably the effort that looked the easiest of the day, even in some of the worst rain – immediately propelled the pair to the top of the leaderboard, from where it was assumed they’d be pushed back down as the day progressed. But nobody – not even the two five-star-winning horses in the field – could come close to catching the pair, and now, they finish the day as the leaders in the clubhouse, having climbed and climbed and climbed from overnight 22nd place on their dressage score of 30.3. 

“If I’m honest, I didn’t really want to run, because I was a bit scared about the ground, but I know the horse loves the mud,” admits Caroline. “He ran very well at Lignières in the mud recently [where he won the CCI4*-S], so some friends of mine gave me a kick up the arse to make me actually go – and he was phenomenal, foot-perfect from the start to the finish.”

Caroline Harris and D. Day. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nowhere along the way, though, was the 35-year-old focusing on the time – instead, she let her exciting young horse, who also finished twelfth at Luhmühlen on his debut this year, find his own rhythm. 

“If I’m honest, I have no idea [how we were so fast!] I don’t know where the minute markers or anything were – I just let him run and jump,” she says. “He’s quite small and nippy, so he doesn’t struggle with the mud at all, and he finished full of running – he could have gone for two more minutes. So I’m not sure how it happened! He just kept galloping and jumping.”

It’s a red letter day for a horse who’s quietly, and in quite an under-the-radar sort of way, been marking himself out as one of British eventing’s next big stars with his talented rider – but even more exciting is the fact that he goes into tomorrow’s final day with eight consecutive clear FEI showjumping rounds behind him. On a score of 40.3, and with just 0.3 between him and second place, that’s the kind of form he’ll need – especially with Pau’s notoriously big, square, difficult showjumping tracks. 

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But the partnership just behind them in second place know all too well that the story isn’t over until the final chapter is fully written. Last year’s champions, Ros Canter and Izilot DHI, looked set to win Luhmühlen this year, too – but on the final day, ‘Isaac’ had his first rails in five years, and they had to settle for a still very respectable fourth place finish. When Ros went on to win Burghley last month with her Olympic partner, Lordships Graffalo, she admitted how much that loss had actually hurt – and that, no doubt, will fuel her to coax another characteristic clear out of her quirky comrade tomorrow and try to regain the top spot again. 

For now, though?

“I’m going to enjoy tonight, first and foremost, and try not to think too hard about the show jumping until tomorrow,” laughs the diminutive rider, who added 21.6 time penalties in a confident, polished round to Isaac’s first-phase score of 19. “From last year’s experience, the party is very good here, so we’ll be heading there a bit later. My mum says she’s going to babysit, so that’ll be nice! Tomorrow, we’ll make a plan, once we get through the trot up and see how the horse feels. My horse is a very good jumper, but it’ll be probably down to me to give him a good ride. So I’ll have to make sure I don’t drink too many drinks tonight!”

Her round on Isaac was at the tail end of the day and in the most deteriorated ground – but that didn’t put Isaac off one bit. 

“It was definitely worse in places, and I think the difference this time is that there was no option to find any fresh ground at all,” she says. “So I ended up, with Izilot, taking lines that were very wide or slightly different to what I walked, that I probably added that little bit of time on. But I think, considering the conditions that the organizers have had to face, the ground has held up. It doesn’t look good, but the horses haven’t had a bad experience today.”

“He’s got the most enormous stride, it’s an absolutely incredible feeling,” she continues. “Sometimes slightly trickier to ride because you can’t just keep on kicking all the time, which is what makes you fast. But I couldn’t be prouder of him today. He isn’t a natural galloper for  long distances, and I was pleasantly surprised by how he came through the finish.”

Ros Canter and MHS Seventeen. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nor did the conditions earlier in the day for her debutant ride, MHS Seventeen, who jumped clear with 20.8 time penalties to move up from 31st to 14th.

“I felt that both my horses kept their ears pricked the whole way around today,” she says. “Despite the challenging conditions, the mud was so wet that, although it slowed them down, I didn’t feel that it sucked them and delayed their jump or anything like that. So I think they came out having had a really positive experience.”

Tom McEwen with Brookfield Quality. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom McEwen left the startbox very early in the day with Brookfield Quality, who had made his debut at the level at Luhmühlen this year, but was retired late on course after a freak patch of inclement weather brought on a severe nosebleed. And so for many people, the memory of that blood and that storm and the chaos of it all cast a huge, floating question mark over the fifteen-year-old gelding – one that he happily dispelled out on course today. 

“I felt like a Pony Club kid back out hunting again out there,” laughs Tom. “I was loving it – and so was Norris, thankfully. But it’s really hard work out there. There’s patches that are really deep, and it’s only going to get worse in this continuous rain, so I’m happy to have gone early and laid down what I think is quite a good benchmark.”

Because he went so early, he continues, “it was hard to gauge how it was riding. But I was one of the few people that really did want to run this morning when it was still raining and you could  hear it on the lorry roof. So I was delighted! I actually think it created an incredible spectacle for the whole day. People rode brilliantly, so it’s been a great day for the sport, even though it’s rained more than England. So that’s one good thing! But Norris is awesome. I could let him go in his own rhythm. There’s a few things that I wanted to do, and I should have ridden on my distances rather than riding from what I’d seen before. But like Caroline was saying, we went out with no minute markers, and you ride off a feeling, and try to get round.”

He and Norris added a reasonably scant 17.2 time penalties to their first-phase score of 25.8 to climb one place, from fourth to overnight third. 

Piggy March and Halo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

While Tom was sitting in his lorry in the downpour, happily counting down the minutes ‘til he could get out and go puddle-jumping, his friend and Norris’s former pilot, Piggy March, was no doubt having a very different experience in her own. She’d spent the last twenty-four hours or so wavering back and forth over whether to run Halo, her five-star debutant and the diminutive stallion who now helms her cut-back string of horses. 

“I didn’t know if this was the right thing for him or not, and then I watched the horses go round, and they looked like happy horses,” she says. “It’s muddy, it’s incredibly wet, but they were smiling, and they were still jumping to the end, and I just didn’t want to give him a bad experience. But then I’m not very good at going out very slowly, and just wanting to get round. I’m competitive, and I like to try and do well. So I thought, ‘I’ll just set off and give it a good go’. So I rang the girls an hour before and went, ‘yeah, chuck some tack on. Let’s go!’” 

That decision paid off. Other than one little moment of gritty five-star riding, when the stallion twisted over the corner at 15B and both horse and rider found a combined equilibrium from who knows where, the round was smooth, packed with gumption, and – yes – happy. They picked up 17.6 time penalties along the way and will go into the final day in fourth place, up from first-phase 10th. 

“I’m just so proud of him. He’s 11, which isn’t that young, but he’s not done masses, and he’s certainly done nothing in the mud,” she says. “He doesn’t like the puddles, and he doesn’t like getting his toenails dirty – but he really dug deep for me. He ran incredibly well; he just got a bit tired in literally the last minute. But up until then, he was like, ‘Yeah, I’ve got the mud. This is fine!’ I kept thinking, ‘good boy, you’re doing really well!’ It’s hard work out there. It’s not ideal conditions at all. But he was happy enough, and he’s finished.”

Alex Hua Tian and Chicko. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

China’s Alex Hua Tian also had an excellent day on a level debutant in Chicko, and enjoyed his own return to the level after having focused so much of his time, energy, and horsepower on championships. 

“I don’t run 5* very often. As a Chinese rider, we focus on championships – Olympics, World Championships, and so 5* is not normally what we focus on,” he says. “But this horse is very special; he’s a cross country machine. He has a huge heart. His owners, Kate and Pete Willis,  they adore the horse so much, and at his age – 14 – I felt he deserved to come here and have a real go. It’s a real shame it’s rained so much, as we were hoping for top of the ground conditions, and I think he’d have been really quick, but I think he dug deep today. He was absolutely brilliant.”

Despite not having the conditions that Chicko most enjoys, the pair delivered one of the rounds of the day, climbing from thirteenth to fifth after picking up 16.8 time penalties for one of the swiftest efforts on the leaderboard. 

“I’m so proud of this horse – I have huge faith in him,” says Alex. “It’s his first 5* but I knew he’d dig deep. He’s Irish, he likes the mud, he’s a good jumper. He’s always very positive; he’s always got his ears forward. So I loved it out there, it was great. First thing this morning, I thought the ground was going to be horrendous – and watching the first half, actually, they were traveling quite well. I think by the time the last of us were going, it was starting to get quite heavy going, and it’s quite hard to find a good footing in between. I just had to say, ‘Chico, come on. We’ve got to ignore it. Just  push on’, and he just kept going – so I’m very, very very proud.”

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd Martin pushed on through the residual aches and pains of his tough Maryland to log an occasionally agricultural but undoubtedly confident and effective early round with Fedarman B, who has previously finished in the top ten here. Though he decided not to run his later ride, debutant Miss Lulu Herself, his midday efforts were well worthwhile: he and Bruno go into the final day in sixth place, with 17.6 time penalties on their tally. 

I was thrilled with him,” he says. “He once again proved he is one of the best cross country horses I’ve ever sat on. That was horrendous conditions and he dug deep and just gave me everything around a very challenging course. I had a rough weekend last weekend so I wasn’t sort of bursting with confidence but I’m very, very grateful that Bruno is such a champion in the cross country. The last 48 hours they’ve been taking out jumps, cutting out loops and it wasn’t till about 30 minutes before I started that I really had a clear idea of what the course is gonna be and the officials made some excellent decisions in taking out some parts of the course.

“My cross country/jumping coach Peter Wylde and I really analyzed the course and there was just a number of combinations that we had a plan on how many strides to go in and a few those numbers changed just because the ground was so boggy. But Bruno is such an adjustable horse and just fought very hard just to clear through the flags. With going early, obviously I don’t get the luxury of watching how things are riding but I’ve got so much faith in this horse and it just gives me so much confidence.”

Of Lulu, he says, “she’s a very careful, green horse at this level and we were to go right at the end of the day and in the most treacherous conditions. I just didn’t have a good feeling about it and so I promised myself that I wouldn’t be stupid and trying to have any ego about it. I talked to my family and the owners and thought we [would save her for another day]. It’s tough when you’ve gone to this huge expense and traveled a long, long way to get here, but there is always another day. Deep down, I think it was the right thing to do.”

Lea Siegl and DSP Fighting Line. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Austria’s Lea Siegl and her Olympic partner, DSP Fighting Line, came to Pau with one goal in mind: to dispel the demons left behind from their debut here last year, which ended in a shock fall and a smattering of facial injuries. 

They may have been chasing a positive completion – and a happy end to an up-and-down season, which started with a broken leg for Lea – but they got much more than that. They climbed from 16th to seventh after adding 18 time penalties to their first-phase score of 29.5. 

“It feels good. After all the shit in Paris [where Fighty was eliminated at the first horse inspection]  and last year here in Pau, I’m even more happy that today, everything went smooth,” she says. “It was quite fun to ride – the ground was not easy, but it is like it is, we can’t change the weather. It’s something we can’t do. But they tried their best in front of the jumps, putting all the sand. So I’m quite happy that they really tried hard and it was rideable. He’s a nice galloper, and I knew that the weather, it doesn’t suit him, but he runs better on this ground than other horses because he’s so light and easy galloping, so it felt good with him. It didn’t feel too hard.”

Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The last competitors out on course, Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent, had the chance to take the lead: Ros and Isaac had already finished with their time penalties, and Emily King and Valmy Biats, with whom they’d been equal second after dressage, had slipped to 23rd after knocking a frangible device in their otherwise excellent round. 

But it wasn’t to be today – though for Oliver, three confident clears across three young horses, two of whom are five-star debutants, is a happy enough day in the office. He’ll head into the final day in 25th place with Crazy Du Loir, 20th with pathfinder En Taro Des Vernier, and eighth with Kentucky champion Cooley Rosalent, with whom he added 23.2 time penalties.

“She definitely had the worst of the ground,” he says. “I couldn’t really find any new ground, and when I did, I was 12 or 14 feet away from where I should be. But I just tried to be as quick as I could, and also look after and give her a good experience, because I think she’s going to be very, very good. I went as fast as I could, but all three horses were incredibly fit, and all three have finished very fresh – they’re a huge credit to the team at home.”

Ninth place is held overnight by Sweden’s Frida Andersen and her Olympic ride Box Leo, who added just 17.6 time penalties and climbed from 32nd place, while the top ten is rounded out by Tim Price and five-star first-timer Jarillo, who looked a picture en route to collecting 22.4 time penalties, just dropping one place on the board in the process. 

Will Coleman and Off The Record. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Will Coleman and Off The Record climbed ten places, from 39th to 29th, after picking up 26.4 time penalties – but, Will admits, this just hasn’t felt like their week. 

All I can say is when we decided to target Pau we sort of planned on a typical year here — firm ground and fast going and technical twisty track and instead we got a 9.5 minute five-star in a foot of mud,” he says. “It was a bog the whole way around by the time I went, conditions that just don’t suit my horse particularly well and he really dug deep for me. We had time, like everybody did. The horse came home and is well and we look forward to tomorrow and then call it a wrap on 2024.”

“There were a couple places where I thought you might get an extra stride here or there. To be honest, by the time I went, the conditions had deteriorated so much that my only plan became to keep my horse as balanced and [keep the impulsion] as I could, not worry too much about numbers and how you were going to do it, just make quick, clear decisions. It was a really physical effort for both of us. To my horse’s credit, he’s such a willing fighter of a character and I’m really proud of him. It’s not the result we came here for and that’s just kind of how it’s gone this year and that’s ok.”

In any case, he continues, horsemanship was at the fore of today’s competition — a happy result by any metric.

“I think they did what they could [in making changes to the course]. You want to preserve the integrity of the competition without putting anyone in jeopardy, and they did that, but really the responsibility was on the riders to make good decisions and I think you saw a lot of people put their hand up when it wasn’t going to be their day, and that’s sort of what we have to do. It was really challenging for all involved, but I’m glad the day is done and we can look forward tomorrow now. Today was pretty tough out there.”

56 pairs are eligible to come forward for tomorrow’s final horse inspection, which begins at the extraordinarily reasonable time of 11.45 a.m. (10.45 a.m. BST/6.45 a.m. EST, because tonight, the clocks go back here and in the UK, but not in the States, and I’m really sorry, but this nonsense makes my brain turn to mush every single year). Then, the showjumping will begin at 15.00 local (14.00 BST/10.00 a.m. EST), and the prizegiving will happen sometime as the sun goes down, because why not, hey? Why. Not.

For now, though, wash the mud out of your eyelashes, go dance on some tables with Ros, and enjoy that extra hour of sleep when you get around to it (if you’re on this side of the pond, anyway). We’ll see you tomorrow for lots more Pau action – and in the meantime, if you’re still hungry for a dirty great big day of cross-country excitement, head on over to Cheg’s live updates thread to recap every single ride in nitty gritty detail. Go Eventing!

Les 5 Etoiles de Pau: [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s Ultimate Guide to Les 5 Ètoiles de Pau, the Final CCI5* of the 2024 Season

Tomorrow, we’ll get underway with our final CCI5* of the year in the south of France at Les 5 Ètoiles de Pau. This event is a festive one that really seems to cap off each season with some fun, featuring raucous crowds (which we got a taste of ourselves in Paris this summer), a technical and twisting track unique in its own right from its 5* counterparts around the world, and riders (and journalists, if we’re being honest) who slip and slide their way into this final major weekend of the season in desperate need of a stiff drink and a high note to end their year on.

Keep this page bookmarked for all the latest from Pau, and we’ll have reports coming your way from Tilly Berendt, fresh off a bender an epic trip to the West coast of the U.S. for some much-needed pre-5* R&R, starting tomorrow. As always, Go Eventing.

Our coverage of Pau is brought to you by our incredible supporters, Kentucky Performance Products, your one-stop shop for science-backed nutritional products to keep your horse feeling their best at all times. They’ll even get on the phone with you to help you formulate a solid supplementation plan for your horse’s individual needs! We’d really appreciate your support of KPP, as they’re champions for our sport and beyond and are wonderful people to boot. Check them out here.

Relevant Links

Les 5 Etoiles de Pau (France): [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Social Media Links: Pau Instagram | Pau Facebook | Pau YouTube

The Schedule

France has done what everyone wishes every 5* would do (probably) and set the first jog on Thursday before dressage begins, and the second jog not at the ungodly hour of 8 a.m. but at the much more socially-acceptable time of 11:45 a.m. What luxury! This event is 6 hours ahead of EST (GMT +2), so set your clocks accordingly to follow the action.

Thursday, October 23 – 10:00 a.m. local time / 4:00 a.m. EST First Horse Inspection
Thursday, October 23 – 2:00 p.m. local time / 8:00 a.m. EST – Dressage Day 1
Friday, October 24 – 9:00 a.m. local time / 3:00 a.m. EST – Dressage Day 2
Saturday, October 25 – 11:30 a.m. local time / 5:30 a.m. EST – Cross Country
Sunday, October 26 – 11:45 a.m. local time / 5:45 a.m. EST – Final Horse Inspection
Sunday, October 26 – 3:00 p.m. local time / 10:00 a.m. EST – Show Jumping

How to Watch

This year, Pau is introducing its own internal live feed similar to what Badminton and Burghley now have. This means you’ll need to pay a one-time subscription fee of about $25 to view all of the action live and on demand. You can purchase your pass or log in to watch here.

The Officials

This year, the Ground Jury will be presided over by James Rooney (IRL), joined by Emmanuelle Olier (FRA) and Katarzyna Konarska (POL). Gert Naber (NED) will serve as this weekend’s Technical Delegate, assisted by Guillaume Vuarnet (FRA). Pierre Michelet (FRA) returns as cross country course designer, assisted by advisor Giuseppe Della Chiesa (FRA). Frenchman Yann Royant will design this year’s show jumping course.

The Entries

You can preview the strong entry list, which features nearly 80 combinations representing 14 nations, in our write-up here. The entry list, which we do know has seen a withdrawal or two, can be found here. The updated entry list as well as start lists will be populated here.

View our Form Guide to this year’s entries here.

The Cross Country Course

View the interactive map below or click here to visit CrossCountryApp.

EN’s Coverage

Keep an eye on this post, as we’ll keep it up to date with each day’s coverage links. You can also follow along at this link.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27

“I’ve Dreamt of This, But I Never Believed It Could Happen”: Caroline Harris Wins Pau CCI5*

Flash Update: Caroline Harris (GBR) Claims Les 5 Ètoiles de Pau Victory with D. Day

One Horse Spun; Five Held at Pau Final Horse Inspection

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26

When It Rains, It Paus: The Cross-Country Day Debrief

Allez All Day! It’s Party Time at Pau – Live Blog From the 5* Cross Country at Les 5 Étoiles de Pau

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25

Reigning Champs and Raining Champs: Ros Canter Sails to Pau Dressage Lead

Take a Gander at Pierre Michelet’s CCI5* Course at Les 5 Ètoiles de Pau + What Riders are Saying

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24

Thursday at Pau: Tom McEwen Takes Decisive Day One Lead with ‘Nervous Norris’

Our Pyrenees Ponies: Your Form Guide to Les 5 Étoiles de Pau 2024

Zut Alors! Eight Horses Held at First Pau Horse Inspection, C’est Merde, Etc

PRE-EVENT COVERAGE

Les 5 Étoiles de Pau Sees Record Entries with 80 Combinations on Roster